| t byfield on Fri, 25 Jul 2003 08:58:37 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> cains and abels |
an interesting discrepancy in how the family members of terrorists
are treated.
on the one hand, we have, of course, mr. al-tikriti's two sons in
iraq, where pragmatism has forced the US to stray pretty close to
violating the very same provisions of the geneva convention it was
squawking about earlier in the war, when squawking was convenient.
(or are recently deposed 'regimists' merely 'enemy combatants' like
those held in camp x-ray? i'd have thought being a senior member
of a regime -- say, commander of regular military forces -- would
make you about as official as it gets.)
on the other hand, we have the family of mr. bin laden on in mid-
september 2001:
< http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2001/09/30/archive/main313048.shtml >
Bin Laden Family Evacuated
Sept. 30, 2001
(CBS) Two dozen members of Osama bin Laden's family were urgently
evacuated from the United States in the first days following the
terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, according to the Saudi
ambassador to Washington.
One of bin Laden's brothers frantically called the Saudi Arabian
Embassy in Washington looking for protection, Prince Bandar bin Sultan
told The New York Times. The brother was sent to a room in the
Watergate Hotel and was told not to open the door.
the watergate -- nice touch.
Most of bin Laden's relatives were attending high school and college.
The young members of the bin Laden family were driven or flown under
FBI supervision to a secret place in Texas and then to Washington, The
Times reported Sunday.
texas -- nice touch.
Many were terrified, fearing they would be lynched after hearing
reports of violence against Muslims and Arab-Americans.
They left the country on a private charter plane when airports
reopened three days after the attacks.
i bet random violence wasn't the only thing they were terrified about.
in the southern arabian peninsula, if not throughout the areas tra-
versed by bedouins, one well-established way to meet an old friend is
to extend hospitality -- sometimes for quite a while -- to his family
and friends. (maybe they went to crawford? nah, that'd be too good.)
King Fahd, the ailing Saudi ruler, sent an urgent message to his
embassy in Washington pointing out that there were "bin Laden children
all over America" and ordered, "Take measures to protect the
innocents," the ambassador said.
It's a tragedy," Prince Bandar told the Times. "The elders" of the
students "came to see me, and one of them was a bright boy from
Harvard who like the others had absolutely nothing to do with this and
yet we had to tell him to go home and wait until the emotions calmed
down. And he told me that he never really appreciated why the Japanese
wanted a memorial or an apology for their treatment in World War II.
The student added, according to the prince, "I understand now that
when you are innocent, in the face of emotion, nothing, not even
common sense, can help argue your case."
evidently, it did help OBL's family to argue their case -- so eloquently
that the FBI chauffered them all over the US for a get-together! (i won-
der who paid for that -- maybe a FOIA is in order?)
Osama bin Laden is one of more than 50 children of a Yemeni-born
migrant who made a vast fortune building roads and palaces in Saudi
Arabia and his extended family spans the globe. Many have been
educated in the United States and the family has donated millions of
dollars to several American universities.
Bin Laden is estranged from his family and from Saudi Arabia, which
revoked his citizenship in the early 1990s after he was caught
smuggling weapons from Yemen.
OBL may be 'estranged' from his family -- that certainly seems to
have been the FBI's presumption, bless their hearts -- but the ~900
pages of congressional report on 9/11 just declassified suggest
that his ability to play well with others in his family may not
have been the salient issue when it came to funding the hijackers:
< http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c=StoryFT&cid=1058868138569&p=1012571727088 >
September 11 report raises Saudi question
By Marianne Brun-Rovet and Edward Alden in Washington
Published: July 24 2003 16:17
Last Updated: July 24 2003 19:27
The September 11 hijackers received foreign government
support while they were in the US plotting the attacks on
New York and Washington, according to the US Congress
investigation into the attacks.
The conclusion, contained in the declassified portions of
the 900-page report released on Thursday, will raise new
questions in particular about the role of Saudi Arabia,
particularly because the administration insisted on deleting
a 28-page section of the report that focused on the Saudi
link.
Senator Bob Graham, the former Democratic intelligence
committee chairman who led the investigation, said the
hijackers "received, during most of this time, significant
assistance from a foreign government which further
facilitated their ability to be so lethal." He would not
identify the government.
The report also contains new evidence that US intelligence
agencies and the Federal Bureau of Investigation knew far
more about the activities of some of the hijackers than has
been previously revealed.
While the administration has insisted that the plot could
not have been unraveled from the information available, a
congressional source who briefed reporters said: "There was
no smoking gun in the sense of all the details and the
specifics in one piece of intelligence."
She added: "But that is not the same as saying that this
attack could not have been prevented."
Despite the deletions, the report contains considerable new
evidence regarding the role that Saudi Arabia may have
played in supporting and shielding terrorists prior to the
attacks.
First, the report quotes a senior US government official and
others that the Saudi government had consistently refused to
co-operate on any US investigations involving Osama bin
Laden.
Secondly, it contains evidence of a more direct link to the
attacks, particularly regarding the activities of Omar
Al-Bayoumi, a Saudi national suspected of having ties with
the Saudi government. Mr Al-Bayoumi was critical in setting
up two of the September 11 hijackers, Nawaf al-Hazmi and
Khalid al-Mihdhar, when they first arrived in San Diego
prior to the attacks. The pair was known by US intelligence
agencies as early as 1999 to be connected with al-Qaeda, and
had attended a high-level meeting of al-Qaeda operatives in
Malaysia in January, 2000 that was monitored by the CIA.
The report says that Mr Al-Bayoumi met with the two men in
Los Angeles in January, 2000, just after a closed-door
meeting that Mr Al-Bayoumi had at the Saudi consulate. The
FBI was aware of meetings between Mr Al-Bayoumi and the two
hijackers and considered them "somewhat suspicious" but
failed to act, the report said.
The report also revealed another major US intelligence
failure prior to the attacks, which it called "perhaps the
intelligence community's best chance to unravel the
September 11 plot."
It said that the FBI had recruited a counter-terrorism
informant in San Diego who had close links to Mr al-Hazmi
and Mr al-Mihdhar, as well as with a third hijacker Hani
Hanjour. The FBI's San Diego field office did not act on the
information he supplied because the CIA had not made the FBI
aware of their suspected links to al-Qaeda.
The FBI agent responsible for the informant told the
congressional committee that he would have acted if he had
been alerted that the pair were likely al-Qaeda operatives.
"It would have made a huge difference," he said . We would
have immediately opened investigations. We would have done
everything."
compare the NYT's coverage of the same declassified report:
< http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/24/politics/24CND-TERR.html >
you'd hardly know saudi arabia existed. they never mention it.
cheers,
t
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